The Egoist eBook

Clara let her eyes rest on his and, without turning
or dropping, shut them.

The effect was discomforting to him. He was very
sensitive to the intentions of eyes and tones; which
was one secret of his rigid grasp of the dwellers
in his household. They were taught that they had
to render agreement under sharp scrutiny. Studious
eyes, devoid of warmth, devoid of the shyness of sex,
that suddenly closed on their look, signified a want
of comprehension of some kind, it might be hostility
of understanding. Was it possible he did not possess
her utterly? He frowned up.

Clara saw the lift of his brows, and thought, “My
mind is my own, married or not.”

It was the point in dispute.

CHAPTER IX

CLARA AND LAETITIA MEET: THEY ARE COMPARED

An hour before the time for lessons next morning young
Crossjay was on the lawn with a big bunch of wild
flowers. He left them at the hall door for Miss
Middleton, and vanished into bushes.

These vulgar weeds were about to be dismissed to the
dustheap by the great officials of the household;
but as it happened that Miss Middleton had seen them
from the window in Crossjay’s hands, the discovery
was made that they were indeed his presentation-bouquet,
and a footman received orders to place them before
her. She was very pleased. The arrangement
of the flowers bore witness to fairer fingers than
the boy’s own in the disposition of the rings
of colour, red campion and anemone, cowslip and speedwell,
primroses and wood-hyacinths; and rising out of the
blue was a branch bearing thick white blossom, so
thick, and of so pure a whiteness, that Miss Middleton,
while praising Crossjay for soliciting the aid of Miss
Dale, was at a loss to name the tree.

“It is a gardener’s improvement on the
Vestal of the forest, the wild cherry,” said
Dr. Middleton, “and in this case we may admit
the gardener’s claim to be valid, though I believe
that, with his gift of double blossom, he has improved
away the fruit. Call this the Vestal of civilization,
then; he has at least done something to vindicate the
beauty of the office as well as the justness of the
title.”

“It is Vernon’s Holy Tree the young rascal
has been despoiling,” said Sir Willoughby merrily.

Miss Middleton was informed that this double-blossom
wild cherry-tree was worshipped by Mr. Whitford.

Sir Willoughby promised he would conduct her to it.

“You,” he said to her, “can bear
the trial; few complexions can; it is to most ladies
a crueller test than snow. Miss Dale, for example,
becomes old lace within a dozen yards of it. I
should like to place her under the tree beside you.”

“Dear me, though; but that is investing the
hamadryad with novel and terrible functions,”
exclaimed Dr. Middleton.

Clara said: “Miss Dale could drag me into
a superior Court to show me fading beside her in gifts
more valuable than a complexion.”